‘Shocks the conscience’ / Grounded / Quizzes!

‘Shocks the conscience.’ Finding “the government’s evidence to be simply not credible,” U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis has extended restrictions on immigration agents’ use of force in their assault on Chicago.
 Before she brought the hammer down, the judge read Carl Sandburg’s poem “Chicago.” (You can read it in its entirety here.)
 She let Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino have it: He “admitted that he lied about whether a rock hit him before he deployed tear gas in Little Village.”
 The Tribune’s Armando Sanchez caught Bovino for a brief interview on video as he went grocery shopping: “We always enjoy the press.”
 A minister hit with pepperballs at Broadview says Bovino “moved in unprovoked and body slammed people and then complained that they had attacked him, and the video evidence shows otherwise.”
 An Oak Park trustee indicted on federal charges after protesting at Broadview is soliciting donations for his legal defense.
 The Evanston Roundtable: The FBI’s trying to block release of records involving a Border Patrol agent’s alleged aiming of a pistol at onlookers after his vehicle was involved in a Halloween crash.
 Chicago police are sitting on video of a Border Patrol agent’s shooting of a woman last month.

Where is Diana Galeano? A Chicago City Council member says the teacher arrested as kids attended Chicago’s Rayito del Sol daycare center is at Broadview.
 The mom of one student there: “It’s something that is out of a terror movie. I could not sleep last night thinking about the safety of my children.”
 Oak Park’s village board has unanimously passed an ordinance banning immigration agents from using village property.

‘The jury determined that the launching of the 12-inch deli sandwich from what the government described as ‘point-blank range’ was not an attempt to cause bodily injury.’ That sentence-no-journalism-class-could-have-prepared-a-reporter-to-write appears in The New York Times’ account (gift link) of a jury’s acquittal of a man accused of assaulting a federal agent.
 Lawyer/columnist Robert Hubbell: “Federal jury refuses to convict a ham sandwich.”
 Lisa Needham at Public Notice says the case put on display “the softest Nazis you ever did see … such delicate flowers that if they are, say, lightly grazed by a sandwich, they are entitled to justice because of the horrific assault they have suffered.”
 Wonkette’s Evan Hurst mocks: “So now sandwich beatings are legal. Another flawless victory for US Attorney Boxwine.”
 That trial was Men Yell at Me columnist Lyz Lenz’s runner-up for Dingus of the Week.
 Seen on Bluesky: “This sets a dangerous legal precedent that I intend to profit from, as the inventor of the knifewich.”

‘You are the literal worst.’ Chicago-based USA Today columnist Rex Huppke boils down the message voters sent Donald Trump and the Republican Party Tuesday.
 Politico: Now begins Trump’s lame duck era.
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson says Republican gerrymandering plans could backfire in another blue-wave election “by moving Republican voters into Democratic-leaning districts, thus weakening formerly safe Republican districts” …
 … but Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link) fears “Democracy’s big night on Tuesday all but ensures Trump will try to double down on dictatorship.”

Grounded. The federal shutdown has come to roost at the nation’s busiest airports, forcing airlines to cut 10% of their flights …
 … including United in Chicago.
 Columnist Neil Steinberg: “The government that should be working smoothly, like air traffic control, isn't, while efforts that shouldn't be done in the first place, like extrajudicial ICE kidnappings, hum along.”

‘The gerontocracy is dead.’
Investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein has personal reasons to celebrate ex-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s decision to retire.
 PolitiFact sums up 17 years of fact-checking Pelosi—about three-quarters of the time rating her questionable statements Half True, Mostly False, False or Pants on Fire.

‘If you are an immigration official … and believe that the public might later criticize you … would you go out of the way to preserve those records that might expose wrongdoing?’ The Freedom of the Press Foundation is sounding an alarm about Homeland Security’s ditching of software that automatically captured federal workers’ text messages and instead relies on them to, believe it or not, just take screenshots.
 404 Media says AI is supercharging “the war on libraries, education and human knowledge.”
 Seven lawsuits filed yesterday claim ChatGPT encouraged suicides and triggered mental breakdowns.
 The weekend’s a good time to review University of Illinois Chicago journalism lecturer Mike Reilley’s overview of artificial technology and fact-check tech for Chicago Public Square readers.

‘Mamdani wins, Cheney dies and the biggest shopping day you never heard of.’ Those topics await you in Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel’s latest news quiz for The Conversation.
 You’ll have little trouble topping your Chicago Public Square columnist’s anemic 5/8 score.

Jimmy Kimmel, M.I.A. Last night’s show was canceled—as of Chicago Public Square’s email deadline, without explanation.
 Watch the Square Bluesky account for updates.
 Substack columnist and Kimmel writer Bess Kalb says her paid subscriptions plummeted after she endorsed Zohran Mamdani for mayor of New York: “I wrote a progressive Jewish opinion and lost so much money it’s essentially deplatforming.”
 The Wrap has video of a confrontation that led to the firings of four editorial staffers demanding answers about layoffs at Teen Vogue.

Top Workplaces. The Tribune’s out with its 2025 rankings of Chicago-area organizations. (Gift link, paid for by those who support Chicago Public Square.)

‘Absolute terror’ / Flying? Not so fast / Yay, Trib

‘Absolute terror.’ A lawyer and rapid-response immigration lawyer team member describes the ICE arrest early yesterday of a teacher at a North Side daycare center as parents and kids watched.
 It was caught on video.
 Politico: It happened just days after passage of a new Illinois law forbidding ICE arrests in and around daycare facilities.
 The Washington Post (gift link): It’s one of the first instances during the second Trump administration in which immigration officers entered school grounds to make an arrest.
 Hundreds of angry neighbors rallied outside that center last night.
 Columnist Eric Zorn: “If they’ve run out of undocumented felons in the Chicago area to round up and are reduced to snatching up daycare workers, then they should get the fuck outta town and find another city to terrorize.”
 The Onion deadpans: “Child Care Worker Proves No Match For Full Force Of U.S. Military.”
 The Daily Northwestern’s assembled a guide to your rights in the face of the federal incursion …
  … including tips for effectively recording immigration enforcement.
 Columnist Christopher Armitage suggests that state attorneys general are “the secret weapon to defeating Trump and Republicans”—and he recommends citizens in Illinois and elsewhere demand investigations into federal crimes committed in their states.

‘People shouldn’t be sleeping next to overflowing toilets.’ U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman has laid down the law for ICE—ordering it to end overcrowded and filthy conditions at its Broadview processing facility, with 15 directives that include free bottled water on detainees’ request.
 Read his full temporary restraining order here.
 An ICE agent’s been charged with drunken driving after working a shift in Broadview.
 The pope’s asking Homeland Security to allow communion to be administered at Broadview.

The feds’ ‘propaganda.’ The Sun-Times analyzes how Trump administration media strategy aims to portray Chicago as a city at war.
 Federal Judge Sara Ellis was set to rule at Chicago Public Square’s email publication deadline on whether to extend her temporary restraining order on ICE brutality against reporters and protesters …
  … after a day in which she grilled Justice Department lawyers about the behavior of, in the words of Wonkette’s Marcie Jones, “Border Patrol Commander / diminutive Nazi cosplayer Gregory Kent Bovino.”
 Among evidence presented yesterday: Video in which Bovino tells agents, “Everybody fucking gets it if they touch you.”
 Watch the Square account on Bluesky for updates.

Reasons to be cheerful. Popular Information spotlights six election results that didn’t make the headlines—including the ouster of a Pennsylvania sheriff who collaborated with ICE and progressives’ control of a Texas school board that censored books.
 Lawyer/columnist Robert Hubbell: “Republicans went down in flames on Tuesday because they refused to acknowledge that ‘We aren’t in 2024 anymore.’
 Heads Up News proprietor Dan Froomkin: “The resistance is ascendant.”
 But, PolitiFact notes, Donald Trump’s not done pressuring states and Congress to change how next year’s elections will go.
 Ex-Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s hanging it up.

Higher tollway fees, sales taxes ahead. The Sun-Times breaks down what Illinois’ new transit spending bill means for you.

Flying? Not so fast. Chicago and Midway airports are among those targeted for thousands of flight cuts beginning tomorrow—as the government staggers through this record shutdown.
 The Washington Post (gift link): “A 10 percent cut at … O’Hare … could mean 121 fewer flights—or more than 14,500 fewer seats—a day.”
 A Chicago Aviation Department general manager faces federal fraud charges, accused of grifting a quarter-million dollars from a snow removal company hired at O’Hare.

‘A hack move.’ Eric Zorn isn’t buying U.S. Rep. “Chuy” Garcia’s explanation for the timing of his decision not to seek reelection—giving his chief of staff a virtually unchallenged path to succession.
 A Chicago City Council member nevertheless is considering a write-in campaign.
 State Sen. Willie Preston—running for Congress from the South Side—is under scrutiny for his profane pro-Trump social media posts.

Yay, Trib. The official Homeland Security Twitter X account condemned the Trib for its reporting on inhumane conditions in Broadview.

A chattier Google Maps. The most popular navigation app is getting an AI upgrade that will, among other things, use landmarks instead of distance to advise drivers when to turn or exit.
 Columnist and science fiction author Cory Doctorow revisits “the 40-year economic mistake that let Google conquer (and enshittify) the world.” (Note: He lays much of the blame on “Chicago School economists.”)
 Hear him talk about his creation of the word enshittify in a Chicago Public Square podcast.

Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.

Square up.

🟥 Square on Bluesky: